10 GOINGS ON ABOUT TOWN ers, and George Segal. Also drawings. Through Saturday, March 3. (Alex Rosen- berg, 20 W. 57th St Open Mondays.) GALLERIES SoHo DAVID BUDD-Panels of solid-blue paint applied with a knife. Through March 15. (Hutchin- son, 138 Greene St.) GRETCHEN CARACAs-Paintings Through March 8 (Green Mountain, 135 Greene St. Opens at noon.) ROSEMARIE CASTORo-Drawings of sawed-off, up- right tree trunks, done on white paper and collaged onto brown paper, plus small wood and acrylic sculptures that look lIke lengths of bark stripped from a tree. Through Wednesday, Feb. 28. (Pretto, now at 150 Spring St Opens at I.) BOB FELDGUS-Paintings. Through March 8. (Westbroadway, 431 West Broadway.) JEREMY GILBERT-RoLFE-Large abstract paintings, done in strong, pure colors, that take off from a grid; there's not a single curved line in the show. Through Saturday, March 3. (Cooper, I 55 Wooster St ) MICHAEL GOLDBERG-Large, powerful paintings in which landscapes are simplified to their basic elements. The paint is made of bronze powder suspended in a solution, and it bites into the canvas like a dye. Through Saturday, Feb. 24. (Sonnabend 420 West Broadway.) DALE HENRY I ROBERTA ALLEN-One side of the gallerv is occupied by four so-called "Interi- ors," each consisting of an ordinary table, a chair, and a painting; two are painted red, two blue. Across the room are four matching "Wall Paintings," brushed directly on the wall (hvo in red, two in blue), which are ab- stractions of the Interiors. I Conceptual works that include both drawings and a diagram taped to the floor. Through Tuesday, Feb. 27. (Weber, 420 West Broadway.) DONALD JUDD-This survey of his work over the past sixteen years includes his plywood boxes and brushed-aluminum wall pieces, and an enormous freestanding piece made up of a succession of identical aluminum frames, four feet high and ten feet long, arranged in a row Through Saturday, Feb. 24 (Castelli, 420 West Broadway.) STEVE KELSEY I DANIEL DOUKE-Large, open trian- gular wall pieces, the largest seven feet tall, made of plywood and daubed with paint. I This artist, member of an emerging school called "material illusionism," makes packing cases-complete with tape, brown-paper cov- ering, and sometimes tacks and nails--out of canvas, gesso, and acrylics, and they do look exactly like packing cases. Through Satur- day, Feb. 24. (0. K. Harris, 383 West Broad- way.) BERNARD KIRSCHENBAUM-Four sculptures, one of them an eighty-five-foot curtain of steel stripping. Through April 7. (Sculpture Now, 14 2 Greene St.) PAT LASCH-Wood constructions, abstract paint- ings and drawings. The paint on the construc- tions, several of which resemble tiered and decorated wedding cakes, was applied with a pastry tube, a technique the artist learned from her könditor father. Through March 7. (A.I.R., 97 Wooster St ) JEAN LE GAc-Selected work from 1968 to last year by a conceptual artist who uses photo- graphs and text. Through March 7. (Gibson, 392 West Broadway.) STEVE LINN-The star of this sculpture show is a huge, full-scale Kenworth truck made of laminated white ash sanded down to a matte finish. Through Saturday, Feb. 24. (Meisel, 141 Prince St.) JOE NICASTRI-Paintings and pencil drawings of figures and flowers done on a gesso surface that is built up in repeated layers On etching paper by a process in which the paper and the plaster and the graphite (or pigment) be- come one The edges of these works are left raw giving them the look of details chipped out of an ancient mural First one-man show in New York Through March 15 (Hoffman, 4 2 9 West Broadway.) GLADYS NILssoN-Watercolors depicting a multi- tude of amorphous figures. Through March 15. (Kind, 139 Spring St.) ED SHOSTAK-Discs, arcs, and arabesques spin- ning off of them are combined in these alumi- S-M-r-Wer-F-S I I 1 21 1 22 1 2J 124 25 26 27 28 1 2 f J num .and wood sculptures, and are also the subject of the graphics being showed with them. Through Wednesday, Feb. 28. (Holly Solomon, 392 West Broadway.) ARLENE SLAVIN-An eight-wall mural entitled "Waterbird," plus related paintings and drawings. Through March 8. (Milliken, third floor, I 4 I Prince St.) ANDY W ARHOL- Wall-to-wall Warhols-sixty- seven paintings lined shoulder to shoulder around the sides of this large exhibition room, plus sixteen more in the rear gallery. Through March 10. (Friedrich, 393 West Broadway. Tuesdays through Saturdays, noon to 8, Sun- days, noon to 6.) GENERATION SHow-The wide diversity of aes- thetic aims in abstract art is clearly illustrated in this show, organized by Michael Walls and consisting of recent paintings by twenty lead- ing American abstractionists born in the Unit- ed States between 1929 and 1946. Among the works are a huge, colorful collage (six and a half feet tall and twelve feet long) by Joan Snyder, made up of drawings by Bedford- Stuyvesant school kids; a sombre, compelling wall piece of plywood and acrylics by Ralph Humphrey; and a triangular wall piece built around three interior triangles by Robert Mangold. Through Saturday, March 3. (Caldwell, 383 West Broadway.) OTH ER GALLERI ES LEON GOLUB-Portraits, based on photographs, of political figures, including Franco, Ho Chi Minh, and Kissinger. Through Monday, Feb. 26. (Visual Arts, 209 E. 23rd St Mondays through Thursdays, noon to 9; Fridays, I I to 4 :3 0 .) JODY PINTO I FRANK YOUNG-Project drawings by an artist who finds similarities between land- scapes and the human organism; the most colorful works in the shovl are of three dis- embodied ears, about four times life-size, floating in the air like so many flying sau- cers.1 Large drawings one of them ten feet tall, each of which offers an elongated, vaguely conical form outlined in black and filled in with countless multicolored pastel strokes. Through Saturday, March 3. (Bromm, 90 West Broadway, at Chambers St. Opens at I.) PHOTOGRAPHY ROBERT ADAMS- Thirty-five recently made photo- graphs of natural land formations in the West. Through Saturday, Feb. 24. (Castelli Uptown, 4 E. 77th St.)... t]f In a collateral exhibit the Museum of Modern Art is show- ing Adams' early works (from the sixties), depicting urban and rural scenes in and around Colorado Springs and Denver. See below, under "Museums," for dates and times. ROBERT FRANK-All eighty-three photographs which appeared in his 1959 book "The Ameri- cans" are on view here. Also, a less welI- known group of prints made in New York in the late forties and fifties, including portraits of MotherweIl, de Kooning, Gandy Brodie in his 10ft, and an unusually soft-toned one of Meyer Schapiro playing with a child. Through Saturday, Feb 24. (Janis, 6 W. 57th St.) CARL TOTH I ROBERT HEINECKEN-Color photo- graphs in which small mechanical objects are seen alongside Polaroid pictures of them. I Erotic prints with text, plus a four-by-five- foot mosaic of two hundred and fifty-five Polaroid prints--of arms, legs, torsos, geni- tals, everything. Through Saturday, March 3. (Light, 724 Fifth Ave., at 57th St.) BURK UZZLE I LUCIEN CLERGUE-Urban street scenes. I Surrealist studies of nudes. Through March 10. (Witkin, 41 E. 57th St.) KELLY WISE-Surreal photographs. Through March 10. (Neikrug, 224 E. 68th St. Wednes- days through Saturdays, I to 6.) FIFTY YEARS OF NEW YORK-More than three hun- dred photographs from the News archives have been mounted by the New York Public Library. See below, under "Museums," for dates and times GROUP SHows-At the INTERNATIONAL CENTER OF PHOTOGRAPHY. 1130 Fifth Ave., at 94th St.: Two shows. More than a hundred works by David Octavius Hill, Charles N ègre, and Auguste Salzmann, all of whom began their careers as academic painters.... t]f Photo- journalist pictures of Europe between the two wars by Lucien Aigner. Through March I I. (Open Sundays.)... NATIONAL ARTS CLUB. 15 Gramercy Park S.: Portraits, still-lifes, pho- to-collages, and experimental works by Eva Rubinstein, George A. Tice, Jan Groover, Andre Haluska, and six others. Through March 4. (Daily, except Saturday, Feb. 24, from I to 6.)... THE NEW MUSEUM, 65 Fifth Ave., at 14th St.: "The Invented Landscape" includes works by ten contemporary photogra- phers. Through April 14. (Opens weekdays at noon; open Wednesday evenings until 8.). . . SRAGOW. 43 Fifth Ave., at 11th St.: A small selection of prints (sQme are gravures) by Kertesz Brandt, Model, and others. Through Saturday, Feb. 24. (Wednesdays through Sat- urdays, I to 6.). . . STUDIO MUSEUM IN HARLEM, 20 33 Fifth Ave., at I25th St. : Works by five photographers-John Pinderhughes, Coreen Simpson, Frank Stewart, Jules Allen, and Dawoud Bey Through March I I. (Tuesdays through Fridays, 10 to 6; Saturdays and Sun- days, I to 6.). _ . WHITNEY DOWNTOWN MUSEUM. 55 Water St., two blocks south of Wall St.: Industrial scenes by Charles Sheeler, Berenice Abbott, Lewis Baltz, and others. Through Wednesday, Feb. 28. (Mondays through Fri- days, I I to 3.). . . WOLF. 30 W. 57th St.: Vin- tage prints by Julia Margaret Cameron, Rog- er Fenton, Timothy H O'Sullivan, and oth- ers Through Saturday, March 3. (Open Mon- days. ) MUSEUMS AND LIBRARIES METROPOLITAN MUSEUM. Fifth Ave. at 82nd St.- King Tut, of course. . . . t]f A show of more than a hundred costumes worn by dancers in Diaghilev's Ballets Russes, supplemented by costume and set sketches (by Bakst, Cocteau, others) and advertising posters. . . . t]f An ex- hibit of fifty drawings by students of Hans Hofmann, including Helen Frankenthaler, Lee Krasner, and Giorgio Cavallon The ,",orks date from the twenties to the fifties. Through March 4. . . . t]f Fifteenth- and six- teenth-century drawings by North European artists. From the Lehman Collection Through March 4. (Open daily except Mondays. Hours: Tuesdays, 10 to 8 :45 ; Wednesdays through Saturdays, 10 to 4 :45; Sundays, I I to 4:45.) MUSEUM OF MODERN ART. I I W. 53rd St.-Archi- tectural styles that have emerged in the last fifteen years are examined in a show of draw- ings, photographs, and models. Starts Fri- day, Feb. 23. . . . t]f Jackie Winsor's geometric floor sculptures, made of unpainted wood, rope, nails, brick. Through March 6.... t]f Paul Klee prints. Through April 3.... t]f An exhibit of thirty collages by Anne Ryan. Through March 6.... t]f Bottle caps, paper clips, rubber bands, and other objects (two thousand of them) transformed by Don- ald Lipski into tiny sculptures that are pinned in rows on the wall. Through March 18. . . . PHOTOGRAPHY: About forty pictures taken in the sixties by Robert Adams. Through May 1. (Open daily, except Wednesdays, I I to 6, and Thursday evenings until 9.) GUGGENHEIM MUSEUM. 1071 Fifth Ave., at 89th St.-A show of thirty-five works by Piet Mondrian (paintings and works on paper, in- cluding two sketchbooks), dating mostly from the twenties and thirties. This exhibit is closed to visitors on Tuesday and Wednesday, Feb. 27- 2 8. (Open daily except Mondays. Hours: Tuesdays, I I to 8, with no admission charge from 5 to 8; Wednesdays through Sundays, I I to 5 ) WHITNEY MUSEUM OF AMERICAN ART. 945 Madison Ave., at 75th St.-The 1979 biennial consists of works in a wide range of styles and me- diums by eighty-eight artIsts of all ages and all levels of fame more than a third of whom work outside the New York area. Through April I. (Open daily except Mondays. Hours: Tuesdays, I I to 9, with no admission charge after 6; Wednesdays through Saturdays, I I to 6; Sundays, noon to 6 ) BROOKLYN MUSEUM. Eastern Parkway-Paintings,